Eventually, the neutral stimulus alone can elicit the state of fear.
A painful stimulus, such as a pinprick, will elicit a sympathetic response to the sweat glands increasing secretion.
A stimulus that is less intense than the sensory threshold will not elicit any sensation.
In short, stimuli, whether they be in real-life, on a television or movie screen, or a combination of the two, can elicit excitation-transfers.
These tracts regulate the sensitivity of flexor responses to ensure that only noxious stimuli elicit the responses.
Emotional stimulus is not eliciting.
Environmental stimuli can elicit parallel artworks from artists whose temperaments are poles apart.
This is done through stimulus-stimulus pairing, for example, the stimulus (smell of food) can elicit a person's salivation.
As a result, the formerly neutral stimulus elicits fear.
Each stimulus can elicit a variety of responses, and there does not seem to be a one-to-one, stimulus-to-response pattern.